Happy Halloween-ish! It’s a spoooooooky time of year, so watch out for dead-end jobs and other scary puns!
Tomorrow 1PT.Rule turns one year old. I’d like to thank everyone who helps me keep this going by tuning in three (or so) times a week! My schedule is pretty tight at the moment, but I’ll try to have something cool up this week to celebrate!
–nv–
Hey! I almost forgot! There is now a cheesy yet “frighteningly-accurate” What Kind of Designer Are You?-Facebook-quiz brought to you by 1PT.Rule! Get on over there and check it out –
I was lucky at this year’s AIGA Conference to come away with business cards of only people I like, which, honestly, is no small feat. It’s a good stack, and I don’t feel like there’s a whole lot of filler to it. Catching up on my correspondence since my return has proven difficult.
This shames me a little bit, as the very next day after my return I received a very nice e-mail from one of the main stage speakers who I talked to for… oh, about 30 seconds total, saying it was nice to see us and thanks for the encouragement. There’s a reason some of those people are up there, and a part of that reason is that they are awesome people (except for that lady at the end, but I’m not wasting space on her).
That said, just because I haven’t sent out a letter or facebook or twitter to you doesn’t mean I’m not trying desperately to do so. You’ll probably see them pile up in your inbox one after another with sent-dates of the same minute. Or so I can hope. –hugs–
Coming home from the AIGA Make/Think Conference I went from inspired, to excited, to confused, to excited again, and finally to apprehensive. When I got back to my desk I found the same messy stacks of paper, the same project folders needing to be filed, and what I though was a lot of e-mails until I read Armin Vit’s Twitter.
Sorry there was no Wednesday strip. The catch-up from being out for a few days coupled with the regular workload of finishing a children’s book (and a handful of other slow-burning projects) pushed my schedule unexpectedly. Also I didn’t really have a joke. I summed up my week this morning into this joyous little pill for you to swallow and I hope you enjoy it.
Whew! What a conference! Really, it’s hard to say on any level that Matke/Think wasn’t better than the Denver ’07 Conference, at least from my perspective. We’ll do either a full podcast recap or a Review Gone Bad of the experience this week, as well as post our Reflex Blue Show with Ann Willoughby recorded before the trip. So there’s lots to say, and alas, as I plow through this Monday morning I find I have not the time to say it. So I leave you with this sketch, done for Friday, which was roundly defeated by our server and the Conference Wi-Fi’s double-team of destruction. Home, and with a proper scanner, I feel better about the result anyway.
Love –
Nate
I have re-upped my membership with graphic design’s flagship organization, AIGA. For those wondering, I called this very scenario months ago, and it played out much as expected.
I’m not super cheery about this development. I have my reasons for rejoining, and the impending conference in Memphis and my presence upon its hallowed stage did play a factor in my decision. Also, I’m looking forward to not being treated like a leper at local AIGA events by a select (and reducing) group of Holier-Than-Thou’s. AIGA and I have a had a tumultuous, rocky, roller-coaster of a relationship during my career, where I one point I could, from a certain point of view, credit the organization for everything I had built for myself; and later, using a similar point of view, credit it for taking much of what I had back. However, were that not the case, we probably wouldn’t even be here today.
So I will be a member of AIGA for the next 12 months. For me to join again in September of 2010, here is a list of things that I would like to see happen.
- Break Even on Projects. By this I mean to say, like a Hollywood movie, that I expect exactly enough work to come to me directly relating to my membership in AIGA, or by result thereof, to both pay for my current membership and the next one. It has been put to me that paying a greater-than-$300 membership fee to AIGA is expected of me simply for existing in this profession, to which I reply “hogwash.” Earn it. Those discounts on Apple and Adobe products are great, but since the little I had saved to purchase those products just went to you, I expect results.
- A Strong, Action-Driven Stance to Destroy Design Contests and Crowdsourcing. Merely skitching behind the beat-up pickup truck that is NOSPEC! (will someone please overhaul that site?) isn’t going to cut it from AIGA anymore. Neither is talk. Action is required on behalf of all designers to protect our craft and business model from idiots, sycophants, and villains. As the number-one crisis we face down out here in the trenches, I expect an organization whose stated goal is the promotion of good design to be out front with sword and shield in hand.
- A Greater Percentage of My Membership Fee Going to the Local Chapter. Out of $320 annual membership fee, my local chapter, according to my receipt, gets less than $80. This puts my local touchpoint in a constant position of playing catch-up and raising funds, which retards their ability to think outside of the box and take risks on new an exciting events and initiatives. Really, they have no initiatives to speak of, because they’re always playing catch-up. I’ve seen the powerpoint on where my membership dues go, thank you, and what I’m saying is I care less about national and global initiatives than I do about what’s happening in my hometown and community.
- This dude gets a job. Come on New York. Step it up already.
- From the Top Down, Focus on Supporting Small to Midsize Design Firms and Independent Designers. There’s an awful lot of AIGA pointed directly to the biggest of the big, branding and design from a world-changing perspective. Budgets of millions. In New York and LA, this is common I gather. For the other 90% of us design, on a daily basis, happens on a smaller scale. Help us. We are hurting now. When an agency of more than 100 people loses five employees in a single month due to declining business, well, that sucks. When a shop of 10-15 loses that many, it may well impede that company’s ability to do business at all, forcing even more layoffs. I have seen it happen. Again, action in this area is preferable.
There’s more, I assure you, such as my desire for the professional events in my Chapter to move outside of the realm of only speakers, shows, and seminars, but there’s already movement in that area. Also, with the Memphis Conference next week, I expect many of these bullet-points to be touched-upon and in-progress (some of them are already happening, I believe) For now I’ll merely accept the I’m-not-a-leper treatment and we’ll work on the rest.







Nate Voss is a designer, illustrator, talkshow host and design journalist. Working in Omaha since 2001, Nate served four years on the Board of Directors for
Donovan oversees all creative development at